Category: Public health

  • ANALYSIS: By Nick Wilson, University of Otago and Michael Baker, University of Otago

    The global covid-19 pandemic is intensifying, with more infectious variants of the virus, and more rapid spread, especially in countries such as the US and UK.

    This deterioration has meant a higher number of infected returnees arriving at New Zealand’s MIQ facilities — with 31 new cases in a recent three-day period.

    This situation is a particular concern given we know hotels used as managed isolation and quarantine (MIQ) facilities are not designed for infection control due to problems with shared spaces and ventilation.

    Indeed, there have been eight border failures identified since early August, 2020, with seven probably associated with failures at MIQ facilities. There have also been many rule breaches in these facilities.

    The Simpson and Roche review of the testing and surveillance regime also highlights multiple problems with the national response, although action is underway to address some of these deficiencies and extra funding is being allocated.

    Nevertheless, nursing staff at MIQ facilities recently reported persisting concerns with staff shortages.

    Recent covid-19 outbreaks and near-misses in Australia remind us that community spread is a real possibility and could threaten the huge gains from New Zealand’s successful implementation of an elimination strategy.

    Reduce numbers of infected arrivals
    There are multiple ways New Zealand could greatly reduce the number of infected travellers arriving and entering MIQ facilities, particularly those with more infectious virus variants.

    Systematic pre-travel testing requirements have been phased in by many countries and New Zealand has added a requirement for pre-travel PCR testing from tomorrow – January 15.

    This process could be made more effective by using a combination of rapid antigen testing and a period of pre-travel quarantine prior to boarding flights (e.g. a five-day stay at an airport hotel combined with rapid antigen testing on arrival at the hotel and just before boarding the flight).

    Auckland hotels are still being used as quarantine facilities, despite known problems with ventilation and shared spaces. Image: The Conversation/GettyImages

    Antigen testing has several advantages over PCR testing and can provide reasonable diagnostic performance in a screening situation particularly with repeat testing.

    The government should also consider a large reduction in travel numbers from high-incidence countries, as has just been implemented in Australia. New Zealand is now accepting higher inbound traveller numbers (about 11,000 per month) than are allowed into all of Australia (about 10,000 per month for a country with five times the population).

    Given the seriousness of the current risk, the government could suspend flights from the UK, US, and South Africa immediately. This is what China has done for UK flights, and Japan has recently banned entry to non-resident foreigners from more than 150 countries.

    Such a suspension could then potentially be extended to other countries with out-of-control pandemic spread — especially if pre-flight testing and pre-flight quarantine is not feasible in such countries.

    These measures should substantially reduce numbers of infected people boarding flights, the risk of infections on flights to New Zealand (which is well documented), and ultimately the number of infected people arriving and the risks of outbreaks in the community.

    The booking system that travellers are using to arrange a space in MIQ facilities as part of their travel planning could be used to help manage these precautions. In the medium term, pre-travel vaccination will become possible and should provide a further way of reducing the risk of importing infection.

    Tighten processes at border facilities
    Some strengthening of MIQ facility processes has recently occurred (e.g. by the NZ Defence Force) but the government could still consider the following:

    • close MIQ facilities in Auckland (to protect such a key economic centre), or reserve Auckland-based MIQ facilities for relatively low-risk travellers (such as those from Australia)
    • eliminate shared-space use in MIQ facilities, at least until the first test returns a negative result (exercising in rooms only, provision of nicotine patches for smokers)
    • prosecute those who break MIQ rules. Despite many instances of rule-breaking within these facilities, no one has yet been prosecuted.

    Fast-track vaccination of border workers
    Waiting for a vaccine to arrive in March is too long in our view. The government could explore a fast-track process for vaccinating border control workers. This process would require expedited MedSafe approval and fast-tracked delivery of the vaccine into the country.

    Given Australia plans to start vaccinating in February it might be possible to come to a joint arrangement with them. This intervention assumes that vaccination provides some protection against transmitting the infection to others, which is likely but not yet confirmed.

    There is a range of other measures that can help New Zealand sustain its covid-19 elimination status until such time as the population is protected by high vaccine coverage:

    • learn about covid-19 vaccination roll-out strategies from countries that seem to have done it well so far (e.g. Israel). Unfortunately, many European countries have had a slow start to their programmes
    • upgrade the alert level system so it maximises risk reduction while minimising economic damage
    • mandate that MIQ facility workers and returnees use digital technologies, such as the Bluetooth function on the NZ COVID Tracer app, to facilitate contact tracing in the event of a border failure. Returnees could be required to use such technologies for two weeks after leaving MIQ facilities
    • consider using rapid antigen tests for community testing — which may help counteract the declining number of community tests which are currently far below optimal levels for early detection purposes.

    In summary, the global COVID-19 pandemic situation is still deteriorating and may continue to do so for some months. New Zealand’s response needs to be urgently upgraded in the ways outlined here. Failure to adapt to evolving realities puts our successful elimination strategy at risk.The Conversation

    By Nick Wilson, Professor of Public Health, University of Otago and Dr Michael Baker, Professor of Public Health, University of Otago. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • By Craig McCulloch, RNZ News deputy political editor

    The New Zealand government is feeling the pressure from all sides on covid-19 with critics calling the latest border controls both too strong and too weak.

    New rules, announced yesterday, mean nearly all New Zealanders living abroad will soon have to show a negative covid-19 test before boarding their flight home.

    Only travellers from Australia, Antarctica and some Pacific Islands will be exempt.

    The Health Ministry is expected to announce a phased roll-out of countries affected over the coming weeks, beginning with the United Kingdom and United States from midnight Friday.

    It is a shift in position for the government, which last year described blanket pre-departure testing as ineffective and unnecessary.

    Covid-19 Recovery Minister Chris Hipkins said the government’s strategy had evolved in response to the global environment and a new strain of the virus running rampant abroad.

    “More and more countries are now adopting pre-departure testing which makes it a lot more feasible,” Hipkins told RNZ.

    “If only New Zealand was doing it, it would actually be very difficult for people to comply.”

    ‘Complacent’ response
    National leader Judith Collins said her party had been calling for such action since August and the government had been “lackadaisical” and “complacent” in its response.

    “There seems to be a real lack of urgency. These pre-departure tests should already have been in place, as they have in other countries. Canada, for instance, took a week. How come it’s taken us so long?”

    Epidemiologist Professor Michael Baker said National’s criticism had validity as most airlines already required a negative test now anyway.

    “We have been quite slow with this,” he said. “I don’t think it’s enough.”

    Dr Baker said the government risked putting too much faith in a single pre-departure test and wanted it to go even further.

    He said people coming to New Zealand from high-risk spots should be required to first quarantine at an airport hotel for five days with a rapid test at check-in and check-out.

    That would greatly reduce the chance of a person becoming infected with covid-19 in the few days before departing.

    ‘Not good guarantee’
    “Getting a negative test over that period isn’t really a very good guarantee that they’re not infected,” Baker said.

    “We think that a better approach would be to introduce a brief period of hotel quarantine at the airport.

    “The alternative, really, is suspending travel from those [high-risk] countries.”

    But Hipkins said pre-departure quarantine would be incredibly costly and logistically challenging to implement.

    “I’d never rule anything out, but that would be very, very difficult to enforce. New Zealand would ultimately have to supervise it. That would mean New Zealand having people in all of those other countries.”

    In contrast, microbiologist Dr Siouxsie Wiles – a vocal critic of pre-departure testing – told RNZ she was disappointed by the blanket roll-out.

    “What happens to families if someone tests positive? Do they end up being stranded overseas? What happens if they’re stranded in a country where they might not have adequate healthcare?”

    Dr Wiles said she would prefer New Zealand took a more “compassionate” approach.

    “We know the pandemic is raging. People have a right to come home. I worry about putting barriers in their way.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Most of the new cases with the new covid-19 variant have come into NZ from the UK. Image: RNZ/Niklas Halle’n/AFP

    By RNZ News

    New Zealand faces an increased risk of community transmission from the UK strain of covid-19 that is now arriving in the country, says epidemiologist Professor Michael Baker.

    There were 31 new imported cases of covid-19 reported today, with the Health Ministry also revealing that 19 people have tested positive for the more infectious UK variant of the virus at the New Zealand border in the past four weeks.

    The variant is considerably more transmissible than previous strains but not necessarily any more dangerous for those infected.

    First detected in November, the variant has driven a spike in cases in the UK and has now spread across the globe.

    The Ministry of Health said today most the 19 cases seen in New Zealand’s managed isolation facilities had come into the country from the UK via the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Qatar or Singapore.

    “Infection prevention control protocols are in place for all staff and we can assure the public that there is no increased risk to the community.”

    But Dr Baker said there clearly was a risk.

    Variant ‘more infectious’
    “As soon as you have a variant that’s more infectious it means those with it are more likely to infect people on the flight to New Zealand, more likely to infect other people in managed isolation and the staff that work there.

    “If the variant gets into the community, it’s more likely to cause an outbreak and it will be harder to control.”

    Dr Baker said the ministry was right that the same strict protocols were being followed at the border, but from a risk assessment point of view the risk has been turned up.

    “Pre-flight testing will obviously reduce the amount of positive cases at the border – some countries have banned arrivals from the UK altogether but that’s taking it too far.

    “We still need to allow New Zealanders the right to come home, but we do need to put in more effort to reduce the number of infected people getting on flights.”

    People should stay home for the week before their flight and be extra cautious when they travel to the airport, he said.

    Next focus for defence
    “We have a booking system so we know who is coming back to New Zealand as most have arranged their plans months in advance.

    “We should be contacting them and giving them advice on what they should and shouldn’t be doing,” Dr Baker said.

    He said people often used their time before a flight catching up with friends and family to say goodbye which increased the risk of getting covid-19.

    “There’s a vital opportunity in the week before a flight to reduce the chance of getting the virus so that could be the next focus for New Zealand’s defence against it.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

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    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Unborn babies’ hearts are at risk as EPA caves to chemical companies’ 20-year effort to whitewash the science on the risks of an extremely dangerous and prevalent chemical, TCE. 

    Don’t miss out on the next big story. Get the Weekly Reveal newsletter today.

    This post was originally published on Reveal.

  • Quickly delivering donated organs to patients waiting for a transplant is a matter of life and death. Yet transportation errors are leading to delays in surgeries, putting patients in danger and making some organs unusable. 

    This episode originally was broadcast Feb. 8, 2020

    Don’t miss out on the next big story. Get the Weekly Reveal newsletter today.

    This post was originally published on Reveal.

  • The federal government’s early failures to manage the coronavirus shifted a heavy burden to local officials. We look at how decision-makers in two states, California and Florida, found their way to shutdown and beyond. 

    Don’t miss out on the next big story. Get the Weekly Reveal newsletter today.

    This post was originally published on Reveal.

  • As the new coronavirus spreads, an ER doctor in Seattle explains how he and other front-line physicians are learning to treat patients and keep themselves safe. Plus, more than eight years after the end of the Iraq War, an Iraqi man is suing a U.S. company that ran interrogations at the notorious Abu Ghraib prison.   


    Don’t miss out on the next big story. Get the Weekly Reveal newsletter today.

    This post was originally published on Reveal.

  • Unborn babies’ hearts are at risk as EPA caves to chemical companies’ 20-year effort to whitewash the science on the risks of an extremely dangerous and prevalent chemical, TCE. 

    Don’t miss out on the next big story. Get the Weekly Reveal newsletter today.

    This post was originally published on Reveal.

  • A Taser is supposed to help police resolve a situation without using their guns. But in police departments across America, Tasers aren’t always living up to their promise, sometimes with lethal results. 

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    This post was originally published on Reveal.

  • The herbicide dicamba is causing a civil war in farm country. Plus, honeybee rustling in California’s almond groves. Lastly, sulfur and its link to asthma in children.

    Don’t miss out on the next big story. Get the Weekly Reveal newsletter today.

    This post was originally published on Reveal.

  • The toxic water of Flint, Michigan, reminded us that lead is a very persistent poison. This week, Reveal investigates the lurking threat of lead from the dust of urban demolitions to the wilds of Wyoming.

    Hear how contractors help one another cut corners on demolitions, putting kids at risk, while city officials study the problem. Meet a public health nurse who explains why she advises families to choose a homeless shelter over a lead-tainted apartment, and learn how childhood lead poisoning still affects one man decades later. Progress has been made cleaning up lead. But much remains to be done.

    Head over to revealnews.org for more of our reporting.

    Follow us on Facebook at fb.com/ThisIsReveal and on Twitter @reveal.

    And to see some of what you’re hearing, we’re also on Instagram @revealnews.

    This post was originally published on Reveal.